Saturday, August 30, 2008

SWR General Interest Meeting!!

We will be having our General Interest Meeting:

Thursday, September 4
at 6pm
Parents Fountain, SUNY Albany
(the fountain near the Science library & the Campus Cntr. food court)

On the Agenda:
  1. Update on the Stop Killer Coke campaign
  2. Fair Trade Alliance
  3. Sweatfree Agenda
  4. Upcoming Speakers

For more info: sweatfreeua@gmail.com

Sunday, August 24, 2008

SWR Back in Action!!

Welcome back!! I hope you had a great summer. Now that classes are starting back up again we plan to have our first meeting:

FIRST MEETING: This Thursday, Aug. 28 6pm, Corner Cafe, Campus Cntr!!On the agenda: 1.) Updates on Stop Killer Coke Campaign2.) Fair Trade campaign3.) General Interest Meeting4.) Potential Speakers

MOVIE SHOWING: Wal-Mart: the high cost of low price, Saturday, Aug. 30 4pm, "Wal-Mart: the high cost of low price takes you behind the glitz and into the real lives of workers and their families, business owners and their communities, in an extraordinary journey that will challenge the way you think, feel... and shop." (email sweatfreeua@gmail.com for more info!)

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Metroland: SUNY Shrugs Off Allegations of Abuse

Posted May 11, 2008


Students for Workers' Rights had teamed with Killer Coke, a nationwide campaign to bring to light allegations of civil-rights abuses in Coca Cola's bottling factories in Latin America, in the hopes of stopping the University at Albany from re-signing its contract with the controversial soda behemoth.
They failed.

On Friday, John Murphy, the board president of University Auxiliary Services, the nonprofit corporation that handles food services for SUNY, announced that UAS would sign another "10-year limited exclusivity contract with the Coca-Cola Company," said UAlbany's Students for Workers' Rights.

"I think it is morally irresponsible for SUNY Albany to re-contract with Coca-Cola in light of the overwhelming amount of information we have provided them about the Company's global practices" said Students for Workers' Rights member Kurt Amelang.

"It is clear that the University has chosen to place profits before people. They are aware of the human rights violations in Colombia, India, and El Salvador. They are aware that there is significant student, community, and faculty support for severing the Coca-Cola contract. Yet, Coca-Cola has paid them to turn a blind eye to our concerns and they have conceded" said Jackie Hayes, member of SWR.

Read the allegations of Coca Cola's complicity in abuse and visit Killer Coke's Web site.

Letter Delivered to Provost-In-Charge, Susan Herbst

May 1, 2007

Dear Provost-In-Charge Susan Herbst and to Whom Else it May Concern:

Today is International Workers’ Day, and on this day to celebrate workers’ rights achievements we’re asking you to celebrate it with us and do the right thing.

Our UAlbany contract with the disgraced Coca Cola corporation tarnishes our reputation and our image. Coke has been widely condemned by many organizations and unions- a few being the US Postal Workers, the United States Steelworkers’ Union, the Teamsters Union, the national United University Professors, the Professional Staff Congress, and the International Labor Rights Fund.

In 2006, Comptroller of the City of New York, William C. Thompson,Jr., filed a shareholder resolution calling for an investigation into alleged violence against union officials and employees at Coca-Cola’s Colombian bottling affiliate, sponsored by the New York City Employees’ Retirement System (NYCERS), Teachers’ Retirement System for the City of New York (TRS), New York City Police Pension Fund, New York City Fire Department Pension Fund and the New York City Board of Education Retirement System (BERS).

“The New York City Pension Funds are concerned about the allegations of alleged human rights abuses at Coca-Cola’s Colombian affiliate,” Thompson said in his press release. “By failing to address this issue, Coca-Cola has fostered a negative image of itself and is now the subject of a boycott campaign, which poses a financial risk for its investors.”


The New York State United Teacher’s (NYSUT) passed a resolution urging its statewide organization to not support Coke. “Concerned about claims that Coca-Cola Co. is complicit in human rights abuses in Colombia, (NYSUT) approved a resolution calling on NYSUT and its affiliates to refrain from serving or selling Coca-Cola products at its offices or union events until allegations have been investigated,” states NYSUT’s website.


Right next door at an Albany County Guilderland public school, a Coke machine was removed thanks to the belief in ethical and humane working conditions by the principal of the school and some of its teachers.

Students with SWR have already given you a presentation on Coca Cola’s human rights and labor abuses and serious environmental problems. We are now asking you to listen to the over 1,000 other students who’ve signed our petition – not to mention student and faculty support – who are asking you to help restore UAlbany’s image and reputation by clearing our complicity and association with such a disreputable corporation.

More than 1,000 students are asking:
For the University at Albany to cut the contract with Coca Cola immediately.

We also want:

Adoption of enclosed campus wide Code of Conduct for University at Albany, modeled after the Code of Conduct/ Statement of Principles for Worker Rights the Taskforce on Sweatshop Labor developed in 2000.

Adoption of the enclosed Code of Conduct to be used in any university bids to define what a “Responsible” bidder means. Currently the term “Responsible” is left vaguely unarticulated and is left up to business-focused administrators to determine.

Non-Exclusive Contract: A commitment in writing to all appropriate parties including University Auxiliary Services, Institutional Services, Students for Workers’ Rights and Student Senate to have a non-exclusive beverage contract to benefit and put students first, not business.

The creation of a new taskforce with students, faculty and community members to review contracts, or corporations manufacturing or providing goods and services for UAlbany consumption.

The mission of this Taskforce would be similar to the Taskforce on Sweatshop Labor, which includes, “The University at Albany is committed to ensuring that apparel sold on our campus is produced with full consideration of the rights and work conditions of the workers who produce these goods. The University at Albany stands firm in its opposition to sweatshop labor.”

Instead of having such a narrow definition of sweatshop labor as pertaining only to apparel products, we want the creation of a Taskforce to be engaged in ensuring that contracts, products and services for UAlbany consumption is produced with full consideration of the rights and work conditions of the workers who produce those goods. Students for Workers’ Rights must be part of this new taskforce and the taskforce must be open to student & faculty participation and decision making.

An official University at Albany press statement cc’d to Students for Workers’ Rights, and Coca Cola national headquarters publicly condemning Coca Cola’s atrocious labor, environmental and human rights abuses and tell them they must ship up; form a global human rights’ agreement and follow it like they are being asked. They should for now follow the UN’s Declaration of Human Rights or face a domino of contract-cuts with other universities.


UNDHC states: “Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association… to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment…. Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests. No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile…”

Coke is guilty of complicity in union decimation by means of intimidation, blackmail, torture, kidnapping, and 9 counts of murder of union organizers in Colombia. This is the charge by International Labor Rights Fund, of the Steelworkers’ Union, and many other organizations.

Everything we ask is grounded in the mission and principles founding the Taskforce on Sweatshop Labor and is in step with its vision. We hope that you too understand the vision of President Hitchcock and our former President Hall was to make our university more ethical and respected. This is building on efforts that they began.
We look forward to talking with you in person and talking this over.

Please do the right thing this MayDay, on International Workers’ Day and respect workers’ rights!

Sincerely,

Students for Workers’ Rights at University at Albany

Press Release: Students Demand UAlbany Sever Contract with Coke!

STUDENTS DEMAND UALBANY SEVER THEIR CONTRACT WITH
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY

On Tuesday May 1, 2007 Students for Worker’s Rights held a press conference demanding the University sever their contract with the Coca-Cola Company after announcing that over 1,200 students supported a contract severance. They cited human rights violations, anti-union practices and environmentally unsound practices as reasons for the cessation of the contract. UAlbany’s contract with Coca-Cola formally ends in 2008.

“It is hypocritical for our University to be espousing ideals of liberty, equality and social justice while doing business with corporations that are guilty of unfair and unethical labor practices,” said Amanda Hickey, a member of Students for Workers’ Rights. “In light of the human rights violations being committed in Colombia, it is imperative that we act quickly to hold The Coca-Cola Company accountable for their unethical practices abroad.”
Since 1989, eight union leaders from Coca-Cola plants in Colombia have been murdered by paramilitaries. In El Salvador, child labor is used to harvest sugar and in the process children have suffered from smoke inhalation, burns and cuts from machetes, with no access to adequate healthcare. In India, courts have ruled that Coca Cola cease its practices of using water from depleted aquifers and selling soft drinks with high pesticide levels.

“Our UAlbany contract with the disgraced Coca-Cola Company tarnishes our reputation and our image,” said Sally Kim, member of Students for Workers’ Rights. “Coke has been widely condemned by many organizations and unions- a few being the United States Steelworkers’ Union, the Teamsters Union, the United University Professors and the International Labor Rights Fund. Since today is International Workers’ Day, we’re asking UAlbany to celebrate it with us and do the right thing by cutting the Coke contract.”